Half of millennials and 75% of Gen Zers have left their job for mental health reasons

From CNBC at Half of millennials and 75% of Gen Zers have left their job for mental health reasons.

This article raises a few questions that need to be asked? Could this trend among our young people have anything to do with…

  • The purposeful and planned secularization of our society over the past few decades by the God- and Bible-hating spirit of Antichrist secular humanists, who have determinately attempted to toss Elohim and his Word out of all aspects of our society?
  • The rise of abortion that has devalued the meaning of life and has murdered the brothers and sisters of many young people leaving them to feel like survivors of a mass genocide by unloving and murderous parents?
  • The rise of the necessity of having two working parents in the home and two income families to survive in the wake of the rising costs of living (and taxation due to the rapid growth of big government and the welfare state), thus leaving no one in the home to raise the children, thus leaving them feeling disconnected and unpainted and unloved?
  • The decline of biblical morality and the preaching of the transforming power of the gospel in the church?
  • The rise of materialism in the corporate church and the hypocrisy of many so-called Bible preachers and teachers who have brought the Word of Elohim into disrepute due to their shameful and unbiblical lifestyles?
  • The rise in the power of the internet along with electronic devices and social media that distract, inoculate people against, brainwash and stupefy people away from the deeper and more meaningful activities and issues of life?

PUBLISHED FRI, OCT 11 201910:43 AM EDTUPDATED TUE, OCT 15 201911:24 AM EDTTodd Wasserman@TODDWASSERMAN

KEY POINTS

  • A recent study by Mind Share Partners, Qualtrics and SAP reveals that half of millennials and 75% of Gen Zers have left a job for mental health reasons.
  • In addition, the American Psychological Association found the percentage of people dealing with suicidal thoughts increased 47% from 2008 to 2017.
  • Companies like Cisco, which claims that 7% of its U.S. workforce is accessing some form of mental health and substance abuse treatment, is confronting the issue head-on, with several programs available to its 75,000 employees and 11,000 managers.
stressed female worker with pile of folders

Christopher Robbins | Photodisc | Getty Images

Cases of burnout have been increasing at an alarming rate in recent years among millennials and Gen Zers. It’s a growing problem in today’s workplace because of trends like rising workloads, limited staff and resources and long hours.

It’s no surprise, then, that a recent study by Mind Share Partners, Qualtrics and SAP reveals that half of millennials and 75% of Gen Zers have left a job for mental health reasons.

The study, which looked at mental-health challenges and stigmas in the U.S. workplace, polled 1,500 respondents ages 16 and older working full-time. Another recent study, by the American Psychological Association, found the percentage of young adults experiencing certain types of mental health disorders has increased significantly in the past decade. In particular, the percentage of people dealing with suicidal thoughts increased 47 percent from 2008 to 2017.

The Mind Share Partners, SAP, and Qualtrics study also shows that the younger generations suffer more from mental illnesses. Younger people dealt with a mental illness at about three times the rate of the general population. The findings are corroborated by another recent study, which shows that while the amount of serious psychological distress increased across most age groups, the largest increase between 2008 and 2017 was among adults ages 18–25, at 71%. For adults ages 20–21, the figure was 78%.

For more on tech, transformation and the future of work, join CNBC at the @ Work: People + Machines Summit in San Francisco on Nov. 4. Leaders from Dropbox, SAS, McKinsey and more will teach us how to balance the needs of today with the possibilities of tomorrow, and the winning strategies to compete.

A 2017 report from the Center for Collegiate Mental Health at Penn State University, meanwhile, found the number of students at various colleges and universities seeking mental health help increased five-fold from 2011 to 2016.

What’s behind the rise

While there’s no definitive cause of the trend, some researchers shared their thoughts with CNBC.

Jean Twenge, author of iGen, a book about the effect technology has on this generation, says that “the rise of the smartphone and social media have at least something to do with it.”

Twenge said the general pattern is that teens and young adults are spending less time face-to-face with others and more time on their screens. “The pattern lines up very precisely that the majority of Americans owned a smartphone from the beginning of 2012 to 2013,” she said. She noted that at that time, mental health issues began to spike.

“Reading about a news event is not going to have the effect on your life and mental health as a fundamental shift in how you spend your time,” she said. “And that’s what’s happened. Less time sleeping, less time on face-to-face interactions is not a formula for better mental health.”

WATCH NOWVIDEO22:23My “Crazy” Story: Changing the game of mental health at CNBC’s @Work Summit

But Peter Gray, a research professor at Boston College, said that it’s not social media or young people’s fractured attention spans that are causing their anxiety; it is school itself.

He traces a progression from the mid-1950s in which society has gradually taken away children’s internal locus of control (someone with an internal locus of control is likely to believe that both successes and failures are due to their own efforts).

As a result, many young people today are lost. “Since the mid-1950s, when they began taking away children’s play, people haven’t learned to take control of their own lives.” Gray said that control is essential to ward off excessive anxiety.

Gray advocates overhauling our educational system to instill more of that focus. He supports the Let Grow Kids Foundationand others. His advice for students is to take a year off between high school and college to check out careers they may be interested in.

Whatever the cause, the statistic highlights several issues plaguing millennials, like a rise in depression and “deaths of despair” (death from drugs, alcohol and suicide), unaffordable living costs and burnout.

Eighty-six percent of respondents in the Mind Share Partners, SAP, and Qualtrics study said a company’s culture should support mental health. “Mental health is becoming the next frontier of diversity and inclusion, and employees want their companies to address it,” the authors wrote.

Cisco confronts mental health in the workplace head-on

Roughly 1 in 5 adults in the U.S. per year suffer from mental illness, according to the National Alliance on Mental Illness. The costs to treat depression, stress, anxiety and other ailments exceeds $200 billion a year, and for many employers the number of sick days and lost productivity associated with mental health represent one of their biggest expenses.

The extent of the problem has caught some off guard. Fran Katsoudas, chief people officer at Cisco, recalled that after the deaths of celebrities Anthony Bourdain and Kate Spade last year, the company’s CEO, Chuck Robbins, sent out a company-wide email addressing the issues of mental health and suicide.

In it he wrote: “In light of recent tragedies, I wanted to step away from Cisco Live for a moment to talk about the importance of mental health. Unfortunately, we all know friends, family, and coworkers battling mental health conditions, or maybe you’re going through your own struggles.”

Robbins, who took over the CEO role in 2015, encouraged employees to “talk openly and extend compassion” and asked that they “have each other’s backs.”

Katsoudas said the response from Robbins’ email was unlike anything the company had ever seen before. “This was a conversation that our employees wanted to have — and not only the conversation, but they needed support.”Cisco is optimistic about the opportunity to drive culture change and create an environment where mental health is viewed, spoken about and supported in the same way as physical health.Cisco spokesperson

Cisco immediately took action to establish a culture of acceptance and pave the way for these conversations. One of their first steps was to include mental health services in the company’s health-care coverage. In addition, Cisco launched #SafetoTalk, which it calls the first virtual community for employees to come forward and connect weekly with others to share their struggles.

“Each of us has a role to play in making sure that those suffering feel less afraid to ask for support in the moments they need it most. No one needs to go it alone,” said Robbins in a note to Cisco employees about #SafetoTalk.

This week Cisco celebrated World Mental Health Day with a series of weeklong activities and virtual event sessions with Cisco employees and mental health experts. Though it’s still early, Cisco claims that 7% of its U.S. workforce is accessing some form of mental health and substance abuse treatment. The programs are available to all of Cisco’s 75,000 employees and 11,000 managers.

“Cisco is optimistic about the opportunity to drive culture change and create an environment where mental health is viewed, spoken about and supported in the same way as physical health,” said a company spokesperson, adding that U.S. engagement for Cisco’s Employee and Family Assistance Program is 40%, compared to 24% for Cisco’s peers.

Despite such programs, according to Katsoudas, there is more to be done, and Cisco is betting that proactive measures could be key.

“In addition to all of these services that respond, we’re also taking a look at how you reduce some of the stress in the system — how you ensure that people don’t get to a place where they feel burned out,” says Katsoudas.

To address this, Cisco is currently offering its employees a five-session course designed to enhance concentration, resiliency and creative thinking, where participants learn simple cognitive strategies and engage in mental training exercises to optimize their performance at work.

 

7 thoughts on “Half of millennials and 75% of Gen Zers have left their job for mental health reasons

  1. No wonder when young adults were asked the question “Would you kill someone for a million dollars?” most replied “YES!”

    • p.s the interview was done @ Huntington Beach, Ca by Living Waters Ministry/Ray Comfort if you care to check it out, youtube video.

    • YOU CAN SAY THAT AGAIN!!! It makes my head spin. If it were not for my hope, faith and trust in YHVH and his Word, I don’t know what a decent, moral, righteous and mentally stable and logical person would in light of the dark outlook. But I praise Yah that the upload is glorious!

  2. Natan thank you for this information… sad world we live in: unfortunately BUT Elohim would not be too surprised because of the way it has all headed..

    Yeshua is our only HOPE & ANCHOR – in this crazy world… The verse that says For he did not come to give us a Spirit of Fear :BUT of Power , of Love & a Sound mind.

    I thank you & your wife for ministering to us faithfully thru Hoshanah Rabbah site.. as reading your articles & posts gives me great comfort in this crazy world. And also the beautiful photos you both share with us to look at. He will keep us in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on thee because he trusts in thee.Yeshua & the Father are our only Hope.

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